I recently had an urge to O/C my system by another 400MHz. I had to bump the voltage up of the CPU, which actually puts my idle temps now at 42C. I've ran Orthos and its pretty darn stable. However when I am playing or typing sometimes my keys appear to stick. If I bump it back down to stock this doesn't happen. I mean they don't physically stick, but the pc acts like thats whats happening.

Any suggestions on this? I was considering bumping the voltage up a bit more, not much just one up. I have no clue why its doing this though. It almost acts like it can't handle the amount of input I am using my keyboard for. I notice it happens most in BF2 when I am flying the helicopter.. The helicopter will literally turn all the way around as if I were holding my D key down which would make the helicopter turn right. It does happen sometimes typing, but its not as noticeable as in BF2 or other games. It defiantly has to be related to my O/C as I've tried other keyboards with no avail.

I bumped the voltage all the way up to 1.5V when I had an E6600 @3.6GHz. True, it showed as ~1.42V in Windows and went down to 1.36-1.38V under load. For 3.4, I think it was at least 1.4V.
You could also try changing fsb termination and northbridge voltage.

I bumped the voltage all the way up to 1.5V when I had an E6600 @3.6GHz. True, it showed as ~1.42V in Windows and went down to 1.36-1.38V under load. For 3.4, I think it was at least 1.4V.
You could also try changing fsb termination and northbridge voltage.

My voltage is 1.5v as well, and my cpu is running a little warmer than usual....

I bumped the voltage all the way up to 1.5V when I had an E6600 @3.6GHz. True, it showed as ~1.42V in Windows and went down to 1.36-1.38V under load. For 3.4, I think it was at least 1.4V.
You could also try changing fsb termination and northbridge voltage.

Yeah mine is at 1.4 now... A bit above it, but like you said in Windows under most programs, and even in the bios it shows at 1.38V

I need 1.36v for 3.2 and can prime 3.6GHz on 1.46v. 1.5v for 3.4GHz or lower seems kinda high. Sometimes folks believe they have stability problems with their CPU when it is often the memory. They run it at high speed with tight timings and not enough voltage to keep it stable.

You fellows with high voltage on the CPU @ a lower clock might want to try setting your ram and CPU to a 1:1 ratio with average timings like 5-5-5-15 then see if your CPU can hold it's current clock with less voltage. If you really want to remove ram from the equation while you experiment go even more sloppy, like 5-6-6-18.

I always find my max CPU OC on a 1:1 ratio and sloppy timings then tighten up as much as I can while maintaining stability.

I don't need to increase any motherboard voltage on P35 other than vcore until I hit a 423 FSB on a 9x multi with Quad core, then I need to increase CPU VTT to keep it stable. That one is crucial for me @ 3.8.